 Namaskar, Maharishika. Namaskar, Luisa. I just wanted to ask about music and art. Sometimes when I listen to the exceptional music, I feel uplifted and joyful, but also a sense of longing and pain. Sometimes it feels like I want to immerse myself in the music, but it becomes almost unbearable. When we are recipients of art, such as music or painting or sculpture, when we engage with the artwork, are we in the present moment or more in a cosmic state beyond the body? Or maybe my reaction is something else? It depends very much on the posture of the person or group of people who create that art. Let's take music. If you have music which is performed to awaken emotions, but is performed by someone who is also in that emotion because it's not really possible to create great music of a certain genre unless you are involved in it. You take a very romantic ballad. That ballad is created by someone who is themselves susceptible to the emotions that create that ballad most of the time. If they are not, then the music will not contain that authenticity. So if they are creating a ballad, it is generally created from the emotional layer of consciousness, the emotional realm, let's say. So there's this guy sitting there and he's playing his guitar and he's singing his ballad and then you are listening to it and it suddenly just touches you very deeply down in the emotional because he's authentic. So the entire emotional realm of consciousness is moved by that. If you are someone who wants to maintain balance in your system, you would not feel too comfortable about that because you would experience it as being extremely emotional, causing deep emotional waves within you and you would feel uncomfortable about it because you are looking to widen your consciousness and to maintain balance between all these six different realms of consciousness. A lot of the New Age experimental music is conceptual in nature. A lot of the electronic music is conceptual in nature. Listening to that actually creates waves in the thinking. You won't start thinking, but you won't have emotions. You won't have a really strong physical response to it. It will be more that the mind itself is impacted by that. So if you are a person who thinks a lot, you will think, unless of course you are on some chemical or the other, that's a different story, but you would be listening to that music and although people say that they go into trans states, the conceptual is so impacted by that kind of music that it leaves the body. Let's put it that way. That's the description because it's the easiest way to understand it. So you are out of the body. That kind of music at one point leads people to distancing themselves from their bodies. That would be the unpleasant part of such music for a person who is seeking balance and presence. Then you can also have very physical music like the drum beats, like the African drum beats. What that does is it moves the physical. You cannot sit still if you listen to those drums beating. There is a point at which a system which is seeking balance and is seeking to be balanced on that entire spectrum of consciousness will feel that something is pulling it too much into the physical. If you go beyond that, there's also transformative music and there's also unity consciousness music like bhajans. There are these bhajans that just after about 10 or 15 minutes, you're just out, you're spacing out and your system, if you're seeking to have a balance along the spectrum of consciousness, will not be too happy about that either. A little bit of bhajans where your eyes are open and you're present. Yes, but the moment you start spacing out, that's what happens. That kind of music is generally created by people who are spaced out. It's fine if someone wants to be spaced out and that's the path they choose, then we embrace that and we accept it. But the teaching here is to be present, to be in the body, to be awake, to be aware of the other, to be aware above all of the truth impulse within. And you cannot be aware of that truth impulse if you're spacing out. It's not possible. There is also another kind of music which is the pluriform music. I would say the ragas of classical Indian music are pluriform. They don't actually pull you out of the system, but they create within the listener a sense of almost of being godly. And even that, if it goes too far, will kick you out. But it happens rarely. And the people who create it are themselves like that because you cannot create it if you're not authentically like that. The listener will know the difference. When you listen to classical Indian music to Raga and you tune into something and you don't tune into the other, it's because the person that's creating it is not coming from that pluriform state of consciousness, but is attempting that kind of music. If you want to be in that state of equilibrium, then it's okay to listen to all these forms of music, but be present. You're listening to it. You're tuning into it. You're aware of it. And then you won't be a victim of those emotional ups and downs where your system is shaking because some people who are sensitive, their systems shake when they listen to very emotional music, very sad music, love music. Of course, there are nuances to this entire discourse. But perhaps another day, yes. Yeah, that's especially Diva's voice. Like Mariah Carey and Celine Dion and Amanda Marshall. But yeah, I think I understand it better now. It's really beautiful. Thank you. Namaskar. Namaskar, Luisa.